Called out my early buys on @CreatorBid. Now we are seeing some low cap runners there. Most of my capital is in Virtuals and ACP agents but I'll still be hunting for new opportunities in BID, Sol ICM, or smth new.
$BID 13.7 > 35m
$DKING 3.4 > 20m
$AGENT 1.2 > 3m
$SHOGUN 1 > 3m
@ConnorOnChain I helped my ex buy Bitcoin near the lows and just held it for now and sold it around 100k. While I traded everyday and trenched. Her ROI ended up higher than mine 😅
8 Ways To Take Down Flock Without A Sawzall:
1. Demand An Audit
Most cities never independently audit whether Flock cameras in town actually reduce crime. Ask your city council to show evidence that these cameras reduced violent crime. Make them prove it. They usually can't.
2. Find Out When the Contract Expires
Every Flock camera program has a contract renewal date. Use FOIAs to request the original contract, all amendments, renewal dates, and termination clauses.
This one is SO important because we must organize BEFORE renewal, not AFTER the cameras go up.
3. Demand the Privacy Impact Assessment
Before deploying any type of surveillance devices with public funds, many city governments are supposed to evaluate the privacy risks.
Ask for privacy Impact Assessment, civil liberties review, and constitutional analysis. If they never conducted one... Ask why not (they hate that.)
4. Show Up Before They Vote
Flock cameras aren't installed overnight. They usually require budget approval, council approval, contract approval. Use tools like "Citizen Portal" to setup automatic notifications for upcoming city council meetings. Speak before, not after installation.
5. Follow the Money
Want to know why your city suddenly wants Flock cameras? It's usually always grants or cronyism.
Ask for grant applications: DHS grants, DOJ grants, Homeland Security funding, ect. Surveillance programs begin because outside money make them "free."
6. Ask About Data Sharing
Every city should have to answer this question: "Exactly which agencies can search our city's license plate database?"
Ask for sharing agreements, MOUs, list of agencies with approval, and search logs. Most people think it's just local police. It rarely is, usually the feds too.
7. Audit Every Search
Public records requests aren't just for the contracts. You can publicly request every audit log showing who searched the Flock system and why.
Ask for date, user, reason for search and any case numbers. Abuse often shows up in the logs before it makes the news or a viral social media post.
8. Compare Crime Before & After
Download your city's crime data. Compare property and violent crime before and after Flock was installed.
If there's no meaningful change... Ask why taxpayers are still paying for it. If officials claim the cameras are effective, ask them to produce the evidence supporting continued funding.
@ConnorOnChain Gov psyop'd? Nah Bitcoin was hijacked and neutered by Epstein class. From p2p cash with potential to be turing complete but neutered into a pet rock/stock.
Bitcoin's own official X account describes it as "trackable digital gold." 👁️
They're not wrong. Every BTC transaction is permanently public: who sent it, who received it, how much, forever. Which means coins can be traced, flagged, and treated as "tainted" by exchanges.
You can change that today. @Bridgeless_com is a non-custodial, trustless bridge that turns your BTC into $BTCx so you can hold or spend it privately on Zano.
No history to trace, no tainted coins, just Bitcoin the way it should be: fungible. 🔒